The sight of using smart glasses with artificial intelligence to capture criminals appears in many Hollywood movies. Now, it has become a reality in China.
In life, many people often suddenly see faces on objects or positions that should not have appeared on toast.
Hiroyuki Arakawa, a 79-year-old diver retired, regularly visits Yoriko, the fish of the Asian sheepshead wrasse for over 25 years, according to Mirror.
Research by Finnish scientists shows that dogs have the ability to recognize faces familiar to them when looking at photographs.
The face shape is primarily determined by the gene, but no two faces are exactly the same.
Chinese police on May 21 summed up a wanted criminal at a concert by Hong Kong-based Cheung Cheung on the face recognition camera.
Currently, Fingerprint sensor and Face ID type face recognition are two of the most prevalent biometric security methods.
Although this is the advancement of artificial intelligence, it makes the privacy of users more fragile than ever.
Recently, a genetic technology company called Parabon Nanolabs used DNA collected from the crime scene, through which the image of the culprit's face was created.
According to an FBI expert, even the agency has not been able to deploy the widespread facial recognition feature you see in the movie.